Understanding MS and Cancer Risk: Insights From Recent Studies

Cancer and Multiple Sclerosis: A Mixed Story

A review of recent research into the correlation between MS and cancer shows mixed results.
Cancer and Multiple Sclerosis: A Mixed Story
Xènia Besora Sala/Stocksy; iStock (2)

A cancer diagnosis has hit very close to home in recent months. It’s likely that cancer has also struck close to most of those reading these words.

Current figures from the National Cancer Institute show that better than two out of every five Americans will be diagnosed with some form of cancer in their lifetime.

Not all cancers are, of course, terminal, and treatments advance at a rather steady pace. Still, “the C word” sends shivers down most of the spines that I know.

Could Having MS Raise Our Risk of Cancer?

When one has a medical condition like multiple sclerosis (MS), which requires multiple medications and numerous scans and affects our abilities to take the lifestyle steps that can help prevent some cancers, it’s natural to wonder whether it may leave us with a higher risk of developing cancer.

A number of different styles of studies have looked at this question, and the answers they’ve arrived at are quite mixed.

One meta-analysis shows a lower risk of cancer generally in people who live with multiple sclerosis.

This analysis seems to be backed up by a study using data from the United Kingdom that found that people with MS were no more likely to be diagnosed with cancer than controls. As we age, however, people with MS receive a greater number of cancer diagnoses than individuals without MS.

It’s getting confusing, isn’t it?

Could MS Influence Some Cancers but Not Others?

A study looking at the French population showed a 6 percent overall increase in cancer diagnosis among MS patients. But even this study had mixed results.

Researchers found lower prevalence of prostate, colorectal, and breast cancers in MS patients while finding an elevated risk for bladder, brain, and cervical cancers.

An ever deeper look into this French study reveals that higher bladder cancer risk might be due to MS involvement in urological issues such as chronic UTI and indwelling catheters, while increased brain cancer figures could be a result of better diagnostics due to the increased frequency of MRI scans of the brain in people with MS.

A study using data on Canadians agrees with the increase in bladder cancer numbers among people with MS.

One way of analyzing the research is to say that we are sure that people with MS are simultaneously more, less, and just as likely to develop cancer as anyone else.

Not particularly helpful, and another pair of studies raises more questions.

What About Cancer Mortality?

When researchers compared survival following a breast cancer diagnosis in women with or without MS, their study results showed that “women with MS have lower all-cause survival after breast cancer diagnosis than women without MS.” But MS “was not associated with altered cancer-specific survival” in this group.

A study on mortality related to cancer in Norwegian MS patients found that all-cause mortality increased fivefold among people with MS, while mortality following a cancer diagnosis doubled among this group.

The researchers questioned whether the increased mortality they found in MS following female breast, ovarian, colorectal, and hematological cancer diagnoses could indicate diagnostic neglect — possibly because routine screenings aren’t done, or because symptoms of cancer aren’t recognized as such in this population.

How Should We React to These Studies?

All in all, the results of these various studies suggest to this writer that people with MS should do everything we can to avoid cancer risk factors (such as smoking, obesity, low physical activity, etc.), to have regular age-appropriate health and cancer checks (beyond just our MS appointments), and to talk to our neurologists about our cancer risks and concerns.

Some of these numbers are frightening. Seeing those dear to us contending with cancer can be even more so.

But knowing our risks is the first step to avoiding or at least confronting the beast in the room.

Wishing you and your family the best of health.

Cheers,

Trevis

Important: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not Everyday Health.

Ingrid Strauch

Fact-Checker

Ingrid Strauch joined the Everyday Health editorial team in May 2015 and oversees the coverage of multiple sclerosis, migraine, macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, other neurological and ophthalmological diseases, and inflammatory arthritis. She is inspired by Everyday Health’s commitment to telling not just the facts about medical conditions, but also the personal stories of people living with them. She was previously the editor of Diabetes Self-Management and Arthritis Self-Management magazines.

Strauch has a bachelor’s degree in English composition and French from Beloit College in Wisconsin. In her free time, she is a literal trailblazer for Harriman State Park and leads small group hikes in the New York area.

Trevis Gleason

Author

Trevis L. Gleason is an award-winning chef, writer, consultant, and instructor who was diagnosed with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis in 2001. He is an active volunteer and ambassador for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and speaks to groups, both large and small, about living life fully with or without a chronic illness. He writes for a number of MS organizations, like The Multiple Sclerosis Society of Ireland, and has been published in The Irish Times, Irish Examiner, Irish Independent, The Lancet, and The New England Journal of Medicine.

His memoir, Chef Interrupted, won the Prestige Award of the International Jury at the Gourmand International World Cookbook Awards, and his book, Dingle Dinners, represented Ireland in the 2018 World Cookbook Awards. Apart from being an ambassador MS Ireland and the Blas na hÉireann Irish Food Awards, Gleason is a former U.S. Coast Guard navigator. Gleason lives in Seattle, Washington and County Kerry, Ireland with his wife, Caryn, and their two wheaten terriers, Sadie and Maggie.

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.